Sweet redemption for Mikaela Shiffrin, who wins Olympic gold

CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — In her final race of the 2026 Winter Games, skiing in the slalom, widely considered her best event, Alpine legend Mikaela Shiffrin finally did it, winning a gold medal on a shimmering cold, blue-sky day in the mountains above Cortina.

“I wanted to be free, I wanted to unleash,” Shiffrin said. “In the end, today, showing up – that was the thing I wanted most. More than the medal. Now, to also get to have a medal is unbelievable.”

Shiffrin seized her last shot, shattering an Olympic losing streak that had stretched over eight straight events, including two here and six at the Beijing Games in 2022. She carved out a lead of .82 seconds in her first run, telling reporters afterward that she felt like she’d pushed her line to the limit.

She then expanded her lead in second run building to 1.5 second margin securing gold.

“It felt very good, really good skiing. I was also a bit on the limit, there were probably three different times on the course where I thought, I could easily be pushed off the course right now,” Shiffrin said after her first run. “I felt like I nailed it with some question marks. I have big energy today.”

This medal moment builds on Shiffrin’s legendary status among Alpine skiers, it is her fourth Olympic medal.

She was already the winningest Alpine skier in history with 108 World Cup wins, along with a gold medal from the Sochi Olympics in 2014 and a gold and a silver from the Pyeongchang Games in 2018. Like other top U.S. athletes in these Games, she has spoken openly about the unique pressure and spotlight scrutiny of the Winter Games.

“Through a lot of discussions with my psychologist and my mom and my team, everything we said was that, despite pressure or nerves, I want to feel this skiing,” Shiffrin said on Wednesday.

When Shiffrin competed here at the Tofane Alpine Ski Center, organizers played dramatic music ahead of each of her runs, clearly signaling the outsized expectations she faced. Shiffrin has also battled severe injury, PTSD and what she has described as deep grief after the death of her father in 2020.

Speaking after her first race in Cortina, Shiffrin talked about working to finally find her comfort zone in these Games. “I didn’t quite find a comfort level that allows me to produce full speed,” Shiffrin said. “I’m going to have to learn what to do, what to adjust in the short time we have before the other [technical discipline] races.”

On Wednesday, she finally put the pieces together, closing her Olympics on the top spot of the podium.

 

Following Trump’s lead, Alabama seeks to limit environmental regulations

The Alabama Legislature on Tuesday approved legislation backed by business groups that would prevent state agencies from setting restrictions on pollutants and hazardous substances exceeding those set by the federal government. In areas where no federal standard exists, the state could adopt new rules only if there is a “direct causal link” between exposure to harmful emissions and “manifest bodily harm” to humans.

Trump would like the government he leads to pay him billions

President Trump is asking the federal government for billions of dollars in damages, putting his own Justice Department on the spot and creating an unprecedented ethical morass.

Australia bans a citizen with alleged IS links from returning from Syria

The Australian is among a group of 34 women and children who had planned to fly from Damascus to Australia on Monday but were turned back by Syrian authorities to the Roj detention camp due to procedural problems.

Russia’s hybrid warfare rattles Poland and NATO

Russia is stepping up covert attacks across Europe — rail sabotage, drones, cyber strikes — testing NATO. Polish officials warn "disposable agents" are sowing fear and weaken support for Ukraine.

‘Let them shower in hotels’: Johannesburg Premier faces backlash amid water crisis

In South Africa, as taps run dry in Johannesburg, Africa's richest city, a tone deaf remark by a senior politician there unleashes fury.

Greetings from Cairo, where lights and decorations transform the city during Ramadan

As Ramadan begins, traditional lanterns called fawanees brighten Cairo. They have become a symbol of Ramadan and are an almost-mandatory home decoration for the holy month in Egypt.

More Front Page Coverage